Women's anxiety and longing in love

Dameon 2022-01-30 08:05:20

Similar to the heroine, I too have just experienced the demise of a long relationship. So at every stage of the film, you can see your own shadow more or less.

Claire didn't get the attention she wanted in her boyfriend's warm and ambiguous attitude, pretended to be calm and stubborn when she said I didn't care about her in front of her son, and talked about her new boyfriend in front of her ex-husband. Probably every girl is in a relationship. A true portrayal of ups and downs.

Claire, 50 years old, has developed very well in her field and has a career she is proud of. In the face of emotional Waterloo, she is still vulnerable. I think she has some love brains. She fully enjoys the sweetness in love, and she is unwilling to let go when she has to separate. She punishes herself with doubled imagination. So actually at the end of the movie, when she learns that Alex is not dead but has started a new chapter in his life, I don't really want her to call him. I actually don't quite understand why the director arranged this way. If it was me, I think maybe I would dig deep into the ground to find Alex's new account and watch his life secretly, or just pull out the phone card and throw it away, completely Say goodbye to this life, instead of getting in touch again and disconnecting again. Maybe this is the difference in thinking, I am too unromantic.

Some people say that the title of the movie "Who Do You Think I Am/Don't Ask Who I Am" means that everyone's feelings in the virtual network are also illusory, so don't ask where you come from, don't ask who is under the skin, just keep each other warm. But I think maybe this name also shows the confusion and vulnerability of women in relationships. Who do you think I am, I am just a lost person in the sea of ​​people.

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Extended Reading
  • Jovanny 2022-01-30 08:05:20

    3.5 The profound intention is actually only supported by Binoche; about a woman who is quietly hysterical, the obsession with dialing the phone again at the end of the film is indeed a bit surprising; virtual and reality, old and young, love and abandonment, and life almost All but the possibility of scars and regrets - but nothing amazing, even a lot of vulgar parts

  • Abigale 2022-04-22 07:01:54

    It's not enough fun, and it's mainly supported by Binoche's accurate and effortless restoration of intellectual women. Social media as a camouflage and weapon enveloped Claire's lust and insecurities, and the therapy session with a psychiatrist boldly exaggerated delusions through conversation, and when the two parts finally meet, the film doesn't follow the suspense buried to create a new one. The climax; just like Alex, who never looked directly at him in the crowd, swept over this part indifferently, turned his head and returned to the confusion of the protagonist, which seemed a bit cumbersome. The screens, the telephone lines, the seats facing each other, the lust and attraction that was about to pour out were captured precisely.

Who You Think I Am quotes

  • Claire Millaud: We all want to distance our self from the prospect of our death.

  • Claire Millaud: There is never just one possible ending.